Prevalence and patterns of antimicrobial resistance among wildlife populations in Africa: a systematic review
A systematic review of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in African wildlife screened 4,802 records and included 61 studies from 21 countries, revealing widespread but unevenly studied resistance patterns. Across 4,669 bacterial isolates from 27 eligible studies, the pooled prevalence of phenotypic resistance was 59% (95% CI: 34–80%) with high heterogeneity, and multidrug resistance was 23.1%. Wild birds showed the highest pooled resistance prevalence (93%), followed by non-human primates (35%) and herbivores (25%), while Escherichia coli—the most frequently studied species (3,414 isolates)—had a pooled resistance prevalence of 62%. Most studies relied on disk diffusion for phenotypic testing, with genotypic assays used in the majority, but sampling was largely opportunistic and focused on human-impacted environments, limiting ecological interpretation. Overall, the findings indicate substantial AMR occurrence in African wildlife alongside major gaps in surveillance, geographic coverage, and methodological consistency.
AMR NEWS
Your Biweekly Source for Global AMR Insights!
Stay informed with the essential newsletter that brings together all the latest One Health news on antimicrobial resistance. Delivered straight to your inbox every two weeks, AMR NEWS provides a curated selection of international insights, key publications, and the latest updates in the fight against AMR.
Don’t miss out on staying ahead in the global AMR movement—subscribe now!



